iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

Manush is a recent graduate from a prestigious university in California who is looking for a job opportunity as a real estate agent.  While he already has samples provided by his friends, he still feels something lacking in his resume.  Specifically, the he believes that his professional objective statement lacks focus and clarity. 

Thus, he sought our assistance in improving editing and proofreading his resume. 

In revising his resume, iwritegigs highlighted his soft skills such as his communication skills, ability to negotiate, patience and tactfulness.  In the professional experience part, our team added some skills that are aligned with the position he is applying for.

When he was chosen for the real estate agent position, he sent us this thank you note:

“Kudos to the team for a job well done.  I am sincerely appreciative of the time and effort you gave on my resume.  You did not only help me land the job I had always been dreaming of but you also made me realize how important adding those specific keywords to my resume!  Cheers!

Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Exam 5

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  California State University, Northridge  »  Psychology  »  Psychology 150 – Introduction to Psychology  »  Summer 2020  »  Exam 5

Need help with your exam preparation?

Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  Need for achievement
B  Self-consciousness
C  Sensation seeking
D  Need for cognition
Question #2
A  children’s ethical behavior depends on the situation
B  children’s ethical behavior depends on their personality
C  children’s ethical behavior depends on their parents
D  children’s ethical behavior is genetically determined
Question #3
A  people’s unconscious processes.
B  a person’s feelings, thoughts, and attitudes
C  the unique ways people learn behaviors.
D  characteristic ways that people differ from one another.
Question #4
A  The honesty-humility dimension was added to describe people who are sincere, fair, and modest, not manipulative, narcissistic, or self-centered.
B  The honesty-trustworthy dimension was added to describe people are truthful, empathetic, and noncompetitive, not liars, callousness, or apathy.
C  The honesty-trustworthy dimension was added to describe people are defensive, manipulative, and gregarious, not shy, agreeable, or authentic.
D  The honesty-humility dimension was added to describe people who are ambitious, independent, and optimistic, not pessimistic, interdependent, or lazy.
Question #6
A  With each increment of shock voltage, fewer participants obeyed, but about 65% still administered 450 volts (the highest level).
B  With each increment of shock voltage, a similar proportion of participants obeyed until the highest level (450 volts), where about 35% complied.
C  Approximately two-thirds of participants refused to continue participation well before the highest level (450 volts).
D  Approximately one-third of participants complied at the highest level of shock (450 volts).
Question #8
A  The slave trade from Africa to the United States
B  The Bolshevik revolution in Russia
C  The virtual eradication of Native Americans by the settlers in the United States
D  German citizens’ willingness to go along with Nazi leaders during the Holocaust
Question #9
A  Milgram’s participants were paid for their participation, so there is no legitimacy to the statement that the research was unethical.
B  The majority of participants reported that they were pleased to have participated in the research, so it does not seem to have been damaging to most of those who were involved.
C  Milgram conducted a follow-up survey of his participants, and most of them indicated that they were very angry at having been deceived. This means that the research was likely unethical.
D  Milgram’s research was certainly unethical, because he conducted it even though he was advised not to do so by his University’s Institutional Review Board (IRB).
Question #11
A  She has seen the police officer ask others who have disobeyed.
B  She views the police officer as an authority figure.
C  She suspects the police officer is off duty and friends with the stranger.
D  The stranger who needs help is not around or close to her in proximity.
Question #12
A  Inequality is a socially constructed situation that should be changed.
B  With limited resources we should share economic capital to maintain stability.
C  Hierarchies are natural, some groups are simply better than others.
D  Even with strong work ethic some people don’t have the opportunity to advance.
Question #14
A  blatant bias
B  schematic stratification
C  social identity
D  implicit personality
Question #17
A  automatic
B  implicit
C  ambivalent
D  ambiguous
Question #19
A  John is currently sad and can more easily recall a time when he got in trouble for a late assignment.
B  The sunny day is making Jaden happy, helping him to recall what he ate for breakfast this morning when he was in a hurry.
C  Yesterday Janis was remembering all the hardships she’s been through in her life but today she felt happy after getting engaged.
D  Jasmine is feeling anxious but is having a difficult time recalling how nervous she was to give a public speech.
Question #20
A  availability heuristic
B  affective forecasting
C  schema
D  directional goal
Question #21
A  People may wait to make a decision on where to eat if they have a need for closure.
B  People may ignore base-rates when judging representativeness.
C  People may be skeptical about evidence that goes against their directional goal.
D  People may overestimate the intensity of future feelings.
Question #23
A  Their direct, self-reports will best predict behavior such as their choice to purchase designer jeans.
B  They are unaware they hold an actual bias, such as a bias towards an ethnic minority.
C  They will show resistance when being primed about a topic.
D  They are quicker at evaluating or categorizing attitude objects.
Question #25
A  form the most positive impressions of those with whom he interacted least
B  carefully form the impressions he makes of these club members only after repeated meetings
C  form the impressions he makes of these club members after only one meeting
D  not form impressions of these club members on physical characteristics